Two jailed for rigging Hong Kong-China bridge tests

Two technicians charged with rigging tests on concrete used to build a multi-billion-dollar bridge connecting Hong Kong with China and Macau have been jailed for 22 and 32 months respectively, reports said Thursday.

Billed as the world’s longest sea bridge, the project has been touted as an engineering wonder by its supporters but slammed as a “white elephant” by its critics.

Photo: HZM Bridge Authority.

Officials say it will boost business and cut travel time, but opponents in Hong Kong see it as another attempt by Beijing to tighten its grip on the semi-autonomous city.

There have also been safety concerns — multiple workers have been killed in construction-related accidents and 19 lab workers were charged last year over faking concrete test reports, with one man jailed for eight months last December.

Senior lab technician and supervisor Mak Pui-shing was sentenced to 32 months in prison on Thursday, while former assistant Kwong Fu-yin was jailed for 22 months, local media reports said.

The court was told earlier that Kwong’s attempts at rigging the tests included substituting the brick with a metal cylinder to meet strength requirements, the South China Morning Post reported.

Dogged by delays, budget overruns, accusations of corruption and the deaths of construction workers, it is unclear when the bridge will officially open.

Since 2011, at least 369 industrial accidents and nine deaths have been recorded, according to the labour department.

Mak Pui-shing and Kwong Fu-yin. Photo: Apple Daily.

Building started in 2009 on the 55-kilometre (34-mile) crossing, which includes a snaking road bridge and underwater tunnel, linking Hong Kong’s Lantau Island to the southern mainland Chinese city of Zhuhai and the gambling enclave of Macau, across the waters of the Pearl River Estuary.

Officials put the current cost overrun of the main bridge section at 10 billion yuan (US$1.5 billion), partly driven by engineering challenges, which have included problems with the drifting of reclaimed land.

The original cost of that section, including bank loans, was 37.7 billion yuan.

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